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The Telegram & Gazette (and Sunday Telegram) is the only daily newspaper of Worcester, Massachusetts.The paper, headquartered at 100 Front Street and known locally as the Telegram or the T & G, offers coverage of all of Worcester County, as well as surrounding areas of the western suburbs of Boston, Western Massachusetts, and several towns in Windham County in northeastern Connecticut.
Worcester Telegram Gazette. Add languages. ... Download QR code; ... Printable version; In other projects Appearance. move to sidebar hide. From Wikipedia, the free ...
Forrest W. Seymour (July 10, 1905 – October 3, 1983) was a Pulitzer Prize–winning journalist for the Des Moines Register and the Worcester Telegram.One of his most notable works is Sitanka: The Full Story of Wounded Knee, an account of the massacre, the events leading up to it and the aftermath.
Vocero Hispano is a Spanish-language weekly newspaper published in Worcester and distributed beyond Central Massachusetts, targeting Latino communities. Worcester Magazine is a publication owned by Gannett that covers news and events in Worcester County. The Worcester Telegram & Gazette is Worcester's only daily newspaper.
The Worcester Telegram and Evening Gazette were separate newspapers founded in the 19th century. T.T. Ellis bought both papers in 1920, and sold them in 1925 to Harry Stoddard, Robert's father, and George Booth, a former Telegram editor. [8] Later, Robert Stoddard took over ownership of the two newspapers, as well as the main radio station in ...
The station was the radio home of the Boston Red Sox in the Worcester area for forty years, from 1967 to 2006. The Red Sox' Worcester affiliation moved to WVEI and WCRN in 2007. In 1987, after selling the Telegram & Gazette to the owners of the San Francisco Chronicle , the Stoddard and Booth families sold WTAG to the Knight Quality Group for ...
In 1905 he began working on inventions to improve printing press operations. The publisher of the Telegram, Austin P. Cristy, insisted that he either resign or stop dividing his time between his work and his inventing. Ellis resigned, and made enough money from his inventions to purchase the Worcester Telegram from Cristy in 1919 for $1,000,000.
The dailies had been sold to the Telegram in 1969. [2] The sale also tied Beacon to independent mid-sized dailies, the Telegram and Evening Gazette, in an industry rapidly consolidating. With the death of Telegram owner Robert W. Stoddard in December 1984, the company was sold 21 months later to Chronicle Publishing Company of San Francisco ...